An ongoing Pursuit

If you had the opportunity to talk to a traveler, or to be one, how many times did you talk about those addictions that people have and they also count traveling as one of them.

All extremes are always bad, the most important thing is balance, but traveling, unlike all addictions, is that it is part of man. It is not considered an addiction. It's a state.

Opportunities

The passion for travel is gaining momentum that is creating a platform of opportunities for larger projects to be carried out, products to be developed, and brands to be built.

An adventure is something that has endless starting points, but it is the very spirit of adventure that starts them all. It is defined by an experience that excites and challenges us and nature is kindly offered as the playground for us to live our adventure, no matter how big or small.

It is all within us. It is our nature.

Is it really all that we want what we need? What is that essential that keeps us standing?

Necessary (from Latin) is the correlative term for "necessity". Necessity is understood as a lack or the requirement of an object. Necessity is often called Ananké (Ἀνάγκη) in philosophy texts.

What is necessary, therefore, is defined in each case by the need it satisfies. For example: to cut the meat you need a knife; To be able to live in today's society, money is necessary; In order to live, oxygen is necessary.

Special meaning has the need to justify a statement as true. Depending on the type of truth that is sought, so will be the necessary reason that justifies and legitimizes the validity of the truth of the statement. This is essential for the establishment of scientific and philosophical truths.

In philosophy the necessary thing would be the logical justification as an absolute reason with respect to the universe as a totality of reality, of being and of becoming. What is necessary would satisfy the need of reason in its search for the ultimate foundation or principle of the real. What is necessary in philosophy is defined as "what is, and cannot not be", or "what cannot not be". This play on words is essential because what is necessary is; but not everything that is, is necessary.

The difference between what is, and what necessarily is, is established with the following logical relationships: What is necessary is (from the verb to exist), but it can include the possible as necessarily conditioned (although the possible does not exist); but it implies a contradiction with the contingent and is (from the verb to be) logically contrary to the impossible.

Minimalism is a term that we use frequently and that lends itself to different interpretations, sometimes confusing. We can use it in architecture, in art, in philosophy or associate it with a lifestyle. But, what was its beginning? What does it really mean?

The term minimalism, in its most general scope, is the tendency to reduce to the essential, to strip away excess elements. The phrase that sums up the minimalist philosophy is the famous "less is more", attributed to the modern architect Mies Van der Rohe.

Minimalism is clearer if it is explained that it actually means minimism. The English term "minimal" (equivalent to minimal Spanish) was first used by the British philosopher Richard Wollheim in 1965 to refer to Ad Reinhardt's paintings and other objects with a very high intellectual content but low manufacturing content, such as "Ready-made" by Marcel Duchamp. The term also applies to groups or individuals who practice asceticism and who reduce their physical belongings and needs to a minimum.

Previous
Previous

Emancipation

Next
Next

Which door do you want to open?